Expansion Tank Sizing Calculator

The Expansion Tank Sizing Calculator determines the required diaphragm tank volume for closed hydronic systems using ASME methodology. It covers hot water heating, chilled water, and solar thermal with water expansion tables from 40–250 °F, interactive SVG tank level diagram, and standard tank size recommendations — free, no signup required.

System Parameters

Water Expansion Table

Temperature (°F)Temperature (°C)Specific VolumeExpansion (%)
40°F4°C0.016020.00%
60°F16°C0.016040.09%
80°F27°C0.016070.38%
100°F38°C0.016130.79%
120°F49°C0.016201.31%
140°F60°C0.016291.94%
160°F71°C0.016392.70%
180°F82°C0.016513.56%
200°F93°C0.016634.55%
220°F104°C0.016775.68%
240°F116°C0.016936.94%

System Type Reference

System TypeMin TemperatureMax TemperatureDescription
Hot Water Heating50°F200°FResidential/commercial hydronic heating
Chilled Water40°F100°FChilled water HVAC cooling systems
Solar Thermal50°F250°FSolar water heating systems
Domestic Hot Water50°F160°FDHW recirculation systems
Process Heating60°F250°FIndustrial process hot water loops

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What is Expansion Tank Sizing?

Expansion tank sizing determines the correct volume of a diaphragm-type expansion tank needed to safely accommodate the thermal expansion of water in a closed hydronic system. When water is heated from 60 °F to 180 °F, it expands approximately 3%. Without an expansion tank, this expansion would increase system pressure beyond the relief valve setting, causing water loss and system damage. The tank formula is Vt = Vs × [(v₂/v₁) − 1] / [1 − (P₁/P₂)], where Vs is system volume, v₁/v₂ are specific volumes at cold/hot temperatures, and P₁/P₂ are absolute pressures.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select the system type (hot water heating, chilled water, solar thermal, or domestic hot water)
  2. Enter the total system water volume in gallons (sum of all piping, heat exchangers, and equipment)
  3. Enter the cold fill temperature and the maximum operating temperature
  4. Enter the system fill pressure (psig) and the relief valve setting (psig)
  5. Click Calculate to see the required tank volume, expansion details, and recommended standard tank size

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I determine my system water volume?

Calculate the total water volume by adding the volumes of all piping, boilers/chillers, coils, and heat exchangers. For piping, use: Volume = π × (ID/2)² × Length. A 1" Sch 40 pipe holds about 0.045 gallons per foot. A typical residential hot water system holds 30–100 gallons; commercial systems can hold hundreds or thousands of gallons.

What is the acceptance factor?

The acceptance factor represents the fraction of the tank volume that can actually accommodate expanded water. It depends on the pre-charge pressure and maximum operating pressure: AF = 1 − (P_fill / P_max) where pressures are absolute (add 14.7 to psig). A higher acceptance factor means the tank is more efficiently utilized. Typical values range from 0.3 to 0.5.

What happens if the expansion tank is too small?

An undersized expansion tank will cause the system pressure to exceed the relief valve setting during heating, resulting in water discharge through the relief valve. Each heating cycle will lose water, eventually introducing air into the system and causing corrosion, noise, and circulation problems. It is recommended to add a 10–20% safety factor when sizing.

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